178 So. 458 | Ala. | 1937
The defendant, Willie Harrison, was convicted of statutory rape, an offense denounced by section 5411 of the Code 1923, which provides that: "Any person who has carnal knowledge of any girl over twelve and under sixteen years of age, *2 or abuses such girl in the attempt to have carnal knowledge of her, must, on conviction, be punished at the discretion of the jury, by imprisonment in the penitentiary for not less than two nor more than ten years. This section, however, shall not apply to boys under sixteen years of age."
On defendant's appeal to the Court of Appeals the judgment was reversed for alleged errors in the admission of testimony offered by the state.
The indictment on which the defendant was tried charged, in four separate counts substantially in the language of the statute, facts constituting the offense.
The opinion of the court states that the evidence was without dispute that the prosecutrix was, at the time of the alleged acts of sexual intercourse, under the age of sixteen years, and soundly holds that each act of sexual intercourse with a girl of that age by a person of the opposite sex over the age of sixteen years constitutes a separate and distinct offense.
The opinion further holds:
(1) That the state, by proving such act on a specified occasion, had elected to prosecute for that offense, and that "evidence as to subsequent acts of cohabitation, and other subsequent associations, acts, and occurrences, between the parties were [was] inadmissible."
(2) That the court erred in allowing the state to offer evidence going to show that the defendant after his arrest and before his trial made offers of "compromise, or attempt to compromise this case."
The opinion holds that it was permissible for the state to offer evidence that the girl in question gave birth to a child, this "for the purpose of proving a crime and fixing the time."
(3) But that the court erred in permitting the state to offer testimony showing or tending to show that the defendant was the father of the child.
We are not in agreement with the opinion as to said holdings numbered (1), (2), and (3).
The first is in conflict with the law as announced in the following cases: Beason v. State,
While this court has not had occasion to consider the question of the admissibility of evidence showing acts of sexual intercourse, subsequent to the act constituting the offense, in cases of statutory rape, we hold that the weight of authority sustains the proposition that it is permissible for the prosecutors to offer evidence of such acts occurring before and after the alleged act on which the indictment is based, as tending to sustain the principal charge by showing the relation and intimacy of the parties. 22 R.C.L. 1205, § 40; People v. Thompson,
In the last-cited case the defendant was convicted of the statutory offense of carnally knowing and abusing a female child of the age of fifteen years; the court upheld the admissibility of evidence of subsequent acts committed by the accused upon the same child, for the reason "it went to show the existence of relations between her and the defendant which tended to make the commission of the act of a similar nature, which was the subject of the charge, more probable, and so to confirm her previous testimony. That the accused was under the influence of a sexual passion in respect to this girl in July, which led him then to take advantage of her youth in order to gratify it, was logically relevant to the question whether he gave rein, in the same manner, to such a passion in respect to her, three months before."
If such subsequent acts are too remotely related to the act upon which the prosecution is based, in point of time, to be without probative force, such evidence should not be admitted. People v. Thompson,
This court in two cases has dealt with the admissibility of evidence going to show an offer of compromise by the accused under indictment for felony. *3
In Wilson's Case (Wilson v. State),
In Sanders v. State,
The holding in these cases does not justify the exclusion of evidence showing a voluntary offer of settlement in a criminal prosecution which embodies an express admission of guilt.
"The test of the relevancy of evidence, it is said by Wharton, is whether it 'conduces to the proof of a pertinent hypothesis; a pertinent hypothesis being one, which if sustained, would logically influence the issue.' "Whitaker v. State,
Applying this test to evidence going to show that the defendant was the father of the child, it supports the affirmative of the issue that the defendant had sexual intercourse with the mother, the prosecutrix.
The propositions embodied in the opinion of the Court of Appeals, numbered (1), (2), and (3), are not in accord with the foregoing and to that extent the opinion is disapproved. This necessitates that the judgment of the Court of Appeals be reversed and the cause remanded there for further consideration not inconsistent with this opinion.
Writ granted; judgment of Court of Appeals reversed.
All the Justices concur. *4